rSlash - r/Prorevenge Scam Me? I'll Steal Your $1,000,000 Inheritance!
Episode Date: November 14, 2021r/Prorevenge In today's episode, OP has a manipulative cousin who is doing everything he can to get his rich grandfather's inheritance. The cousin tricks OP and the grandfather and gets OP kicked out ...of the house. OP gets revenge by setting a trap that he knows the cousin is too greedy to possibly resist. The cousin gets caught red-handed stealing jewelry from his grandparents, which invalidates his claim to his (possible) $1,000,000 inheritance! Get 10% off your first month at Betterhelp.com/rslash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to R-slash, a podcast where I read the best post from a cross-reddit.
Today's subreddit is R-slash Pro Revenge, where OP tricks his thieving cousin into losing millions of dollars.
Our next reddit post is from 327 Nova. Back story, 25 years ago my aunt passed away when I was a baby,
leaving my two cousins who were both in their early 20s alone to fend for themselves.
My grandparents, who were very wealthy, put a clause in their
will that grandkids would receive half of their share of inheritance if a parent passed before
the child reached 30, and then they'd receive the other half of their inheritance when my grandparents
eventually passed. Both of my cousins received a very sizable inheritance coupled with the money
they got from selling my aunt's house. The younger of the two cousins paid off for college loans and
was able to buy property, and she still lives on the same plot of land. The older sibling just blew
all of his money. It was crazy! Within six years, he was back to living in a condo, working as a cop.
Everyone in our small family knew that he had a substance issue, so he was barely making ends
meet with his officer salary and buying copious amounts of drugs.
Over the next four years, my cousin went to rehab three times, sponsored by my grandparents.
He sobered up after getting his girlfriend, now wife, pregnant.
She is an absolutely wretched woman.
She saw my grandparents as a payday, and essentially baby trapped my my cousin thinking that was her tickets. Within
seven years they had three kids, so she's locked in tight. She works as a nurse, and with
three kids they're always looking for extra money. So guess who they would ask? You got
it, my grandparents. Being the kind spirits they are, they always lend it a hand. My father,
mother, sister, and I got sick of it really quickly.
My grandmother unfortunately passed away when I was 17, leaving my grandpa as the last remaining
Grandparents. I was undoubtedly my grandfather's favorite among the Grandkids,
which left a really bad taste in the mouth of my cousin and his wife.
I had two more years of high school before college,
so I lived with my grandpa to keep him company and helped take care of him. My cousin and his wife hated this. So much so, that
whenever they came to visit and I wasn't home, they would send their three grimmons into my
room to destroy it. That was just the start. The longer I lived there, the more they would mess
with me. My cousin even placed one of those little mechanical noise makers in a cabinet in my room, the one
that plays sounds at random intervals to make you think that you're insane.
Thankfully my German Shepherd would always hear it, and after a week or so she finally
found it.
They did this to distance me and deter me from taking care of Grandpa so they could swoop
in and be the heroes.
This continued until, allegedly, one of their kids found my gun.
By this time, I was 18 years old and I was in possession of a firearm.
I used quotation marks here because my grandfather has guns, but he can't aim or shoot them anymore
due to arthritis and nerve degeneration.
So when I moved in, he placed all the weapons in my hand, should the need for self-defense
arrive.
But if he ever saw me handling
the guns for any reason other than cleaning, there would be hell to pay. Since I was very well
trained with guns and I had a sense of pride in defending my home, I took this responsibility very
seriously. I always kept a handgun in a lot container in my nightstand with the key on a high
shelf out of reach of the Grimlands. One fateful damn out getting my grandfather food when I come home,
and my older cousin, his wife, and my grandfather are staring at a gun on the table.
It was my gun that I kept in the lock box.
It was loaded, and it had a bullet chambered.
I always kept the magazine separate in the lock box, but never loaded into the gun.
The lock box was nowhere to be seen.
My cousin claimed that one of his kids found the gun and was playing with it. I was 100%
certain that my cousin either found the key or broke the lock box open to get to it and
loaded, because a 6 year old wouldn't be able to reach a key that I myself could barely
reach, figure out what it was to, load my gun, and then
chamber it.
I tried my best to explain that what my cousin had said was BS, and that I never kept
my firearms loaded in the house.
But my cousin, who's a cop, scolded me on gun safety, and threatened to have me arrested
if I didn't leave.
And the only reason why he hadn't arrested me yet is because we're family.
I was asked to collect my belongings and go back to my parents. My cousin had won. Or so he thought. The next day I apologized
to my grandpa and explained to him there was no way one of the kids could have gotten
the key. He agreed with me and apologized, but he thought it best I moved out until things
cooled down. But once they do, I would be welcome back home. Since then, my relationship with my grandpa was a bit fractured due to my cousin's
lies.
A month later, my grandfather died of a heart attack at the age of 86.
I was devastated.
I was just beginning to get back into the rhythm with him and rebuilding the trust that
was somewhat shattered.
To this day, I'm still unsure of what kind of man he saw me as due to my
cousin's actions. Immediately, my cousin and his wife began sucking up to my dad. They had already
sealed a payday with their grandpa, so it was time to move on to their uncle. This persisted
for a month or two, but I wouldn't stand for it. Then came time for the will. My grandfather's
lawyer read out the will to me, my father, mother, and sister in our
home.
Our two cousins would be briefed individually on their share of the estate as per my grandparents
requests.
Then, the lawyers read this miracle line in the will.
If anyone attempts to claim any part of the estate that isn't assigned to them, they
forfeit any assets they're supposed to receive, and their assets will be divided equally among the remaining family members.
This was basically my grandparents' way of saying, if you try to claim more than you're
given, you get nothing.
My father was supposed to receive every piece of physical property for my grandparents
because he was their only remaining child.
The revenge.
I hatched a plan.
I called my cousin, and I told him all of Grandma's jewelry was to be donated to a charity auction.
Grandma's collection of gyms and precious metals was extensive to say the least, so a charity event wouldn't care if a few pieces were missing, right?
It was a huge trap that my greedy bastard of a cousin couldn't resist. He immediately took the bait and went over
to my grandparents house, determined to snatch up as much as he could. Just a handful of my
grandmother's jewelry could send his kids to college. Coincidentally, my dad was on his
weight with the lawyer to my grandparents house to overlook everything.
According to my dad's testimony, my cousin had three shoe boxes worth of grandma and
grandpa's jewelry piled on the kitchen counter, ready for loading into his car.
My dad and the lawyer stood in the kitchen wondering why it was all there when my cousin
walked in for my grandparents' bedroom with the fourth and final shoe box.
The jig was up, my cousin put two into together that I'd set him up.
And yeah, I had set him up.
However, there was no penalty against me for exploiting my cousin's greed so that he
would screw himself over.
It's worth noting that, between the 18 years from my aunt's death and my grandparents'
death, their wealth had increased several times over.
So my cousin felt cheated and expected to receive just as much money as my sister and I, despite
receiving half of his inheritance already and blowing it.
Throughout this whole ordeal, my cousin's younger sister hasn't had a problem at all,
and she's still weeping over Grandpa's death like the rest of us.
However, just like that, my cousin lost enough money in the course of 30 minutes to make
him contemplate his sanity.
All over greed, my cousin's beward of a wife apparently filed for divorce a few
weeks later. We haven't heard from him in nearly six years, as he's all but disgraced
now. You can call this a fairytale ending, and in this particular part of the story at
somewhat is. But honestly, I would rather have my grandparents. Man, Opie didn't say how much
money we're talking about here, but if the grandmother had enough
jewelry to put all of his kids through college, and what's a typical... what is average
college tuition?
The average cost of college in the US is 35K per student per year.
Wow!
Okay, so 35K times 4 years times 3 kids, God that's $420,000.
If OP meant that literally, that selling the grandmother's jewelry would be worth all
3 kids going to college, then that's $420,000.
If the grandma had like $500,000 in jewelry, then grandma and grandpa were rich as in rich
rich. So by that logic, this
cousin was probably standing to inherit millions of dollars. He said that the other cousin bought
a house and paid off all their debt with just half of their inheritance. So yeah, that
checks out. We're talking literally millions of dollars. Whoops, there goes the big payday
because your cousin is too greedy to obey the will.
What an idiot!
Our next reddit post is from PME or Severum.
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So I work in an aerospace facility that's large enough that you'll never meet everyone
who works there. It's the type of place where everything you could ever need, including
pins, are provided for you. However, as free pins go, you already know we got the sucky ones,
so I just buy my own pins, thanks.
Around the time of the incident,
I had just taken a promotion.
Part of the deal was I'd be working
second shift instead of first.
Okay, by me, just as I was getting used to my new schedule,
I started losing my pins.
This wasn't abnormal for me, but it just kept happening.
I'd come into
work, and I would swear that I put my pin right here last night, but now I can't find it.
I grew suspicious of my now-previous co-workers who knew where I usually stashed things, and
I hatched a plan. First, I had to make sure that my pins were indeed being taken rather
than me losing my mind due to my new schedule. I bought a pack of pilot G2s which are the best pens out there and I laid a trap. I work in a machine shop and
there are toolboxes everywhere. I set up and run multiple machines but there's a
particular machine that everyone knows is kind of my home base. In the accompanying toolbox,
I left a pen in the top drawer front and center for some pin dayhot to find, and sure enough, it was gone the next day.
I'm not crazy, so the hunts be gone.
In my line of work, we have control documents.
Every piece and part is documented and serialized.
One of our huge taboos was using any color other than black ink on these documents.
It was obvious what I had to do.
When I bought my last pack of G2 pins to avoid having to use the awful free pins, I also
bought a set of colored G2s. I took the ink cartridge from a pink pen, and I used a
black sharpie to hide both the ink and the tube and the colored cap on the top of the cartridge.
It looked a bit ugly, but I knew that I wasn't dealing with a pro here. I placed
my disguised pink cartridge in an unsuspecting black pen body and left it in my usual hiding spots.
The next day when I came into work, sure enough the pen was gone. My trap had worked.
The first thing I heard in my shift past down meeting was how some idiot used pink ink on a work
order this morning. And I had
better make sure for the million time to use black ink instead of some stupid colored
ink. I didn't even have to fess up to setting a trap. I nailed that fool right to the wall.
And no one even knows what I did. Suck it, Pinchamon. Down in the comments, Salabale
Jim says. But I want to know if the pen ceiling has stopped or if the thief is just checking the pins before using them now.
OP replies, I haven't had a pin stolen since, but keep in mind, I've now got multicolored pin bodies with black ink and them laying around
because nobody would be dumb enough to steal a green pin, right? OP, your genius knows no bounds!
Our next reddit posted from Yellow Swaggerknot. A city near me had a farmer holding out as the city expanded.
The city wouldn't let him sell his land that was zoned as commercial since it was a farm
while completely surrounded by commercial development.
The city wanted him to sell the land that was zoned for agriculture.
Basically to let some developer bulldoze the fields and flip it for commercial space and
easily ten extra investments.
But the farmer didn't budge, so the farmer and the city were at a stalemate.
The area became more and more developed, housing started encroaching onto the back of his
property.
The farmer was getting old and tired of this mess, and he didn't want to pass this fight
onto his kids, so he came up with a plan.
The property had been used for soybean and farming corn up until this point. It wasn't really a burden to his neighbors. He applied for and received proper
licensing from the state for a hog confinement lot. In case you don't know, that's where
they keep tens of thousands of hogs before they're brought to market. They're normally
located deep in farm country. They stink for miles. The city tried to stop him
legally, but they never incorporated the land in the first place. So they tried to
stop him at the state level. He followed the process to the letter and well
it's farmland. The city thought that maybe he wouldn't follow through. But he
did. He had 400 hogs delivered to what at that point was one of the busiest roads in town.
The locals nearly lynched the city council.
In less than a week, the city backtracked a nearly 20-year feud and let him sell his
farm for the fair commercial rate as he had originally bargained for.
Down in the comments, we have this story from Zoreb.
Something similar happened where I lived.
A farmer had this big piece of land and he wanted to divide it into six buildable lots. The neighbors didn't want this
because they preferred the open space. Anyways, they fought the zoning change on the bases
of increased traffic. The owner said, fine, I'll just convert it into a pig farm because
that doesn't require a zoning change. That was our slash pro revenge, and if you like
this content, be sure to follow my podcast because I put out new Reddit podcast episodes
require a zoning change. That was our Slash Pro Revenge, and if you like this content, be sure
to follow my podcast because I put out new Reddit podcast episodes every single day.